Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Book Review: The Big Fat Surprise

“If saturated fat is healthy, why doesn’t xxxx say so?” The Big Fat Surprise provides the answer to that question, whether xxxx is “my doctor,” “the government,” or “the American Heart Association.” Author Nina Teicholz provides a detailed explanation of how a weak hypothesis has led to low-fat diets dominating nutrition discourse in the American public, government, and academia for the last several decades. She details the confluence of factors that helped demonize historically prized saturated fats such as those found in dairy foods and beef. These factors include cherry-picked data, charismatic and bullheaded scientists, vegetarian leanings, industry financial influence, groupthink, institutional inertia, and the well-intentioned act now attitude of a politician and his team.



America’s fear of animal fats started in the early 1950s with the work of scientist Ancel Keys. Using epidemiological data from just six countries, he published a paper showing an association between dietary fat intake and heart disease. With that, the diet-heart hypothesis (alleging that dietary fat causes heart disease) was born. There were many problems with the study and it was only powered only to show correlation (not causation). Nevertheless, Keys promoted his hypothesis strongly. Keys had a strong and persuasive personality, and he responded to critics with vigor. Despite many scientists’ disagreements, Keys’ hypothesis persisted. Despite twenty-two countries showing an at-best nebulous link between fat intake and heart disease, Keys’ hypothesis persisted. Despite ample evidence of healthy populations (Inuit, Masai, and Navajo) eating high-fat diets, Keys’ hypothesis persisted.

The American Heart Association (AHA) got its first big infusion of finances in 1948, so it saw a great deal of growth in the 1950s. This coincided with the timing of Keys’ popularization of his fat-fearing hypothesis. Keys was close to leaders in the AHA and the organization adopted this diet-heart hypothesis as a guiding truth. Over time, the hypothesis evolved to include concern about serum cholesterol levels, which are often elevated by saturated fat consumption. By 1961, the AHA recommended polyunsaturated fats (PUFAs) from industrially processed seed oils as part of its otherwise-low-fat “prudent diet” because of their cholesterol-lowering tendencies. Despite evidence that high triglycerides were more indicative of cardiovascular issues than high cholesterol, the AHA promoted the prudent diet. Despite evidence that high HDL cholesterol (raised by saturated fat) was actually protective, the AHA promoted the prudent diet. Despite a 1967 Indian study showing Southern Indians getting heart disease at 7 times the rate of Northern Indians while Northerners ate 8-19 times more fat, the AHA promoted the prudent diet.

The diet-heart hypothesis remained entrenched in the AHA’s recommendations and in the minds of the American public. In 1977, a small government committee led by Senator George McGovern met to investigate the link between diet and heart disease. McGovern’s team issued Dietary Goals for America that were in line with the AHA’s prudent diet. The central diet-heart hypothesis remained unproven, but the well-intentioned report stated that its authors “cannot afford to await the ultimate proof”. Three years later, those goals were built into the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Similar logic (“What are the risks associated with eating less meat, less fat, less cholesterol?”) was used to dismiss criticism from a nutrition task force prior to issuance. The idea that saturated fat could be replaced by something worse was not considered realistic. The low-fat diet was assumed right (for everybody) until proven wrong. By 1980, this assumption suddenly had the backing of the AHA, the processed food industry, and the American government. Despite a growing chronic disease epidemic, these same groups continue to promote a similar diet today.

On top of going into detail on the history of America’s dietary guidelines, Teicholz covers many interesting topics, including:
  • the history of American red meat consumption
  • a fascinating comparison of animal-food-eating Masai vs. geographically similar plant-based Akikuyu
  • the dangers of PUFA consumption 
  • cases of the AHA historically supporting and promoting foods now known to be harmful
    • trans fats
    • hard candy, sugar, syrup
    • breakfast cereals getting stamped with AHA "heart-healthy" sticker (for a fee) 
    • PUFA-laden industrial seed oils (the AHA still recommends these) 
  • potential impacts of low-fat diets for children
  • the misleadingly-defined Mediterranean Diet
  • a history of trans fats
  • science and history showing the healthfulness of low-carbohydrate, high-fat diets

Readers of The Big Fat Surprise will learn a great deal about the history, the personalities, and the organizations that shaped America’s dietary guidelines. By spending a decade of her life investigating the issue from every angle, Teicholz masterfully shows that the diet-heart hypothesis emperor has no clothes. Her passionate work demonstrates that saturated fat has been wrongly vilified for the last fifty years. Above all, The Big Fat Surprise teaches that an idea can become widely accepted for a diverse set of reasons that does not include truth.

Thursday, February 14, 2019

Clinical Experience Using Low Carb (Part 1)

A lot of what is written about in this blog probably seems a little abstract. But real, effective results trump all. And real, effective results are what many doctors are getting by using low-carbohydrate, ketogenic, and even all-meat diets for their patients.

This approach can be effective enough to reverse things as seemingly different as diabetes, joint pain, anxiety, and gout.

Here are some brief notes from a recent podcast with Dr. Ken Berry where he describes the results his patients have from adopting a ketogenic way of eating:


Friday, February 8, 2019

Book Review: The Alzheimer's Antidote

Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) is generally viewed as an unstoppable disease with a cause that is too complex to understand or prevent. Amy Berger, author of The Alzheimer’s Antidote, counters that AD may not be as enigmatic as commonly believed. Medical literature often refers to AD as “Type 3 Diabetes” and like most chronic diseases, it is related to chronically elevated insulin. Berger is far too nuanced and too practical to claim bulletproof treatment or prevention of this dignity-robbing disease. However, her approach of using a ketogenic diet and other lifestyle modifications is an important step towards improving cognition in AD-afflicted people. Some of the same tactics can also mitigate the risk of developing AD in the first place.

This is the only way I could make the review any more glowing.


Berger postulates that the defining factor of AD is the brain’s inability to properly fuel itself via glucose. The good news is that brains unable to properly metabolize glucose can still metabolize ketones. Ketones are produced by the liver when one eats a very-low-carbohydrate diet, so Berger promotes this ketogenic way of eating (along with other ketone-boosting interventions) to improve cognition in a person suffering from AD.

The book highlights the work of Dr. Dale Bredesen. In contrast to the disappointing results from drug-based AD treatments, Bredesen’s work has been largely successful. His ketogenic approach has allowed many of his severely AD-impaired patients to go back to work and lead their normal lives. Berger shares his quote: “AD is not a mysterious, untreatable brain disease-- it is a reversible, metabolic/toxic, usually systemic illness with a relatively large window for treatment.

Berger discusses brain health from many angles, and she spends lots of time underscoring the value of cholesterol for a healthy brain. She is highly critical of the idea of cholesterol-lowering medications (statins) and calls out the fact that people who take them have increased risk of brain fog, cognitive impairment, depression, hormonal imbalances, diabetes, low libido, infertility, and memory loss. Furthermore, antacids (e.g. Pepto-Bismol) and proton pump inhibitors (e.g. Prilosec) can lead to brain-atrophying vitamin B12 deficiency. With common usage of these drugs and with common diets being nutrient-poor and insulin-spiking, it is no wonder that we are seeing cognitive decline in people earlier than we used to.

The Alzheimer’s Antidote pushes back against a common idea that beta-amyloid plaques are a driving factor in Alzheimer’s. Rather than disease causes, these plaques are effects: the plaques build up when an enzyme that could degrade them instead is too busy degrading excessive insulin. Long before beta-amyloid plaques show up in the brain, decreased brain glucose metabolism can be detected in PET scans (including in people just in their 30s and 40s). Berger also downplays common concern about the APoE4 gene variant. While APoE4 carriers do have an increased AD risk, focusing on genetics distracts from the root cause of elevated insulin levels.

For AD sufferers, for AD caregivers, and for anyone who cares about maintaining cognitive health, this book is a terrific resource. In a a practical, compassionate, and realistic manner, it teaches the reader how to implement a low-carb diet to improve cognition. It also makes the case for lifestyle practices like exercise and intermittent fasting. Berger’s work gives plenty of “why” and lots of "how" but it ultimately provides something else even more important: hope.





If you want to see a heartwarming real-life example of Berger's approach, see here. That video is what inspired me to finally read this book.

While you will find Berger's name in several of my favorite podcasts, I think one of her best interviews is here on the Peak Human podcast.

Tuesday, January 15, 2019

The Power of Nutrition

For anyone wondering why someone would become interested in, fascinated by, or obsessed with nutrition, check out this Tweet:

Things like this are why people like me are so passionate about nutrition. And about the potential of keto. 😃😃😃

Monday, January 14, 2019

This is Your Health on Keto

A well-formulated ketogenic diet (WFKD) improves insulin resistance. Insulin resistance is the condition connected to nearly every chronic disease: from type 2 diabetes to cancer to heart disease to Alzheimer’s and more. Most American adults today are insulin resistant. About 9 out of 10. Therefore nearly everybody could benefit from eating a ketogenic diet. A full description of a WFKD is beyond the scope of this post, but at its essence, a WFKD is a low-carbohydrate diet consisting of whole foods (=/= 50 grams of carbohydrate or less per day, eat until full, no calorie counting).

To highlight what happens to real people when they go on a ketogenic diet, it is helpful to look at a couple interesting cases: (1) the Virta Health study, and (2) dual lab values between twins: one eats the standard American diet, one eats a ketogenic diet.

Virta Health Study

In one year, using the ketogenic diet, the Virta Health program reversed Type 2 Diabetes in 60% of its patients. Yes, that’s right: type 2 diabetes, commonly thought to be chronic and progressive, can be reversed. In the same peer-reviewed study, 94% of patients reduced or eliminated their usage of injected insulin.

Nearly all health markers improved for the patients treated with the ketogenic diet. This includes reduced inflammation, weight loss, improved blood pressure, improved liver function, and improved cardiovascular health markers. (Despite the common belief that saturated fat is unhealthy, it turns out that a low-carbohydrate diet with a significant amount of saturated fats is likely very good for heart health.)

That all sounds abstract, but the Virta ketogenic intervention was performed on 218 real people who greatly improved their health by modifying their diet. Many of these people reversed their diabetes and greatly improved their quality of life. That is the power of nutrition; and specifically, that is the potential of a well-formulated ketogenic diet. You can read some of their testimonials here.

Lab Values of Twins (One Keto, One Standard American Diet)

This video details the lab value differences between two 16-year-old twin sisters. One twin eats a ketogenic diet. The other eats something akin to the standard American diet (some meals are ketogenic because the meals eaten with her family are low-carb). They share the same genetics but different diets.

The twins have remarkably similar lab values for most health biomarkers. Even their blood glucose levels were nearly identical. However, the standard American diet twin is significantly more insulin resistant. The keto twin’s fasting insulin is significantly lower than the other twin’s. Likewise, the keto twin’s C-peptide measurement (a proxy for insulin resistance) is significantly lower. As discussed in this post on insulin resistance, elevated insulin levels are an indicator of impending health problems. These elevated insulin levels may appear decades before blood glucose levels rise to prediabetic or diabetic levels.


MeasurementStandard American Diet TwinKeto Diet TwinNote
LDL Cholesterol (mg/dL)6198For more on proper context for interpreting LDL-C results on keto diet, visit www.cholesterolcode.com
HDL Cholesterol (mg/dL)5357
Triglycerides (mg/dL)3842Both excellent
Glucose (mg/dL)8788
Hemoglobin A1C4.90%4.80%
hsCRP (mg/L)0.250.17This is a marker of inflammation. Both have excellent results, extremely low inflammation.
C-peptide (ng/mL)2.61.3Significant difference-- and generally, the higher the C-peptide, the greater the insulin resistance.
Insulin (uIU/mL)13.44.6Wow, what a difference. And in the (arguably) most important health marker measurement of the lab results.

Summary

  • Most modern people are insulin resistant, which is likely at the heart of most chronic diseases.
  • A well-formulated ketogenic diet improves insulin resistance.
  • Therefore, eating a WFKD is likely a good way for most people to improve existing conditions related to insulin resistance and to reduce the risk of developing such conditions.
  • On a related note, eating a WKFD is likely to lower an individual's inflammation, improve cardiovascular health, and improve liver function.
This post looks at lab values to utilize common objective measurements. However, in real life, subjective experiences are what count. In other words, I don't care if my triglycerides look great on a lab sheet if I feel like crap. For the keto dieters with improved insulin resistance markers, what do you think happened to their moods and energy levels? (If you want a hint, try Googling "keto mood")

The results listed here are a small sample size; they are just from one study and one twin vs. twin comparison. The sample size is small but meaningful. (And remember, you yourself are a small but damn important sample size.) The Virta info is peer-reviewed science carried out in the real world. The twin comparison is a look at two teenagers sharing common genetics but different diets in the real world. I showcase them because they reflect broader truths about what typically happens when people in the real world adopt ketogenic diets. Ketogenic diets improve insulin resistance and therefore they improve people's health, often to an incredible degree.


*Disclaimer: I am not guaranteeing that a ketogenic diet is appropriate for every person, nor that it is the only way to improve insulin resistance. However, the ketogenic diet is so reliable at improving health for the vast majority of the population that it is more appropriate to get that message across as opposed to discussing every rare exception. Focusing on rare exceptions would be missing the forest for the trees. For what it’s worth, Virta Health medical director Dr. Sarah Hallberg says the only type of person she has found that is not a good candidate for a ketogenic diet is someone who has hyperchylomicronemia (1 in 1-2 million people). Regardless, if considering a change, do your own research and always consult a medical professional where appropriate.


References that Dig Deeper

The Ketogenic Diet as a Treatment for Metabolic Syndrome